Unlearning Creativity

good evening

ladies and gentlemen my name is farah

muller

and my job is to make sense of things

people can’t see i’m also terrified of

speaking in public

so we’re just going to do a little

exercise if you could all please stand

while we’re doing this exercise i would

request you to suspend

all internal thought and try to focus

your awareness

on the towards the sounds that are

happening around you

all right everybody ready we’re going to

start by rubbing our palms together

and then we’re quickly going to snap our

finger

doesn’t that sound like the rain

we’re going to rub our thighs

we’re going to generate some heat again

with our palms and place that on our

eyes and

take a couple of deep breaths

all right you can take your seat now

so good evening ladies gentlemen

and kids it’s tough being a kid these

days

the amount of career options that you

have

while i was growing up i remember my

teacher asked me what i wanted to be

when i grew up and i told her that i

wanted to be a penguin

obviously that didn’t work out for me

very well

like most people i grew up listening to

a lot of music

my grandfather used to listen to a lot

of indian classical music

while my dad used to listen to a lot of

western classical music

and on the days when we were lucky they

would settle on a middle ground and make

us listen to whale sounds on the record

player

in you know i studied science in

university because that was the

line of thought that was the most

relatable

for me that was the most relatable for

me at that point

and yeah i’m getting nervous sorry

that was the most relatable to me and

while i was in the second year of my

master’s in geology

i started to realize that it wasn’t

providing me with the kind of creative

outlet that i needed so i decided that

i’m going to find that outlet

and i went on to study fine art it

sounds

very easy right now but it wasn’t as

easy

but it provided me with the opportunity

to explore

and find that creative outlet that i

needed

i went on to study fine art at cambridge

school of art

and that’s when i came across this man

called john cage

was basically my hero and he changed my

life he sort of brought me back to these

whale sounds that i grew up listening to

and he equipped me with the vocabulary

to

not only understand and comprehend it

but to express it in my own way

so when i say sound i don’t just

mean something i don’t just mean

music which is basically organized sound

i mean everything that vibrates

including

silence now the human ear has an

auditory spectrum

of 20 hertz to 20 000 kilohertz

everything above

and below that makes sound as well is

just not receptable by the ears so there

clearly is no such thing as silence

sound is a kind of energy and energy

is something scientists even today

baffle

to define and we go back time and again

to

what the greeks said about energy

basically it was something that was

at work can you imagine all the

advancements in technology and science

and we’re still stuck to define

something like that

the sound gets more interesting after

that it has no material of itself

it has no physical qualities of itself

but yet

it speaks about materiality

us it is our most primal means

of self-defense and we are always

immersed in it we have eyelids and no

early so we’re always immersed within

sound it is one of the first senses to

develop

even as early as three months old in

your mother’s womb

and is one of the last ones to pass when

we die

so this was the point of departure in my

research during my time

at cambridge when i came back

i found myself having

years of learning two very different

degrees

and no job category to fit in and even

more questions than i started off with

and it was a confusing time i was

a little lost and i was considered

jobless at that time

and it was during that time that i

realized that

i was a researcher not just by choice

but by default it made me happy to learn

new things and find out creative

and meaningful ways you know to apply

this research

and i so it’s and creativity is a

phenomenon

whereby something new and valuable is

created

creativity is also folding a paper plane

and to make it fly further creativity

sometimes

is also inventing a job category for

yourself when you don’t have one

so anyways i’m a creative researcher

and my research is about how sound

affects human subjectivity and a sonic

experience

over the years i my research has taken

different outlets and different forms

sometimes

it’s art installations in museums and

galleries

sometimes it’s writing for journals

sometimes it’s making a movie soundtrack

to sometimes it being making adaptive

devices

so i’m going to take you through a

couple of some of these outlets of

mad creativity that happen this is

vinsharton vinsharten is

basically just translates to a wind

window

this installation was made in the quaint

little village of kalga

kalga basically has no locals and it

its economy comprises of four hostels at

the time

and a lot of plastic waste is generated

as a byproduct of that

this is a kinetic insulation which means

that it interacts

with the wind the ambient wind intensity

and direction of the wind

activate the structure to produce a

sonic response

so what we did was we went around

collecting a thousand

used plastic used and discarded plastic

bottles

and we cut cleaned and shaped them and

we tuned

them to generate a sonic response

it is sort of a visual and architectural

response to it’s a metaphor for the

cycles of waste and consumption that’s

going on

everywhere around the world these days

so this is what it sounded like

[Music]

this is translate so this was a piece

that i did in oslo a few years ago it’s

basically

using the human voice as sonic graffiti

we’re going to pass around this piece in

a few baskets some of the volunteers

will be coming out with it

so basically the record so each code

is transcribed with a recording

which narrates the idea of

basically hold on the recordings and

narratives of people who have relocated

and they’re narrating their experience

of relocation via

landscape and sound

these codes weren’t placed in a gallery

these codes were basically distributed

all over the city of oslo on the trams

the buses the ferries

and while these codes narrated different

people’s stories of migration

they were migrating themselves and i

think the most happiest moment was

that when i found that a code traveled

until alaska i can track where these are

accessed by the way

so english was used as a standardizing

language

because it reveals and conceals people’s

identity as a language as a marker of

identity

so we’re going to have a listen to karan

shah there

where do i call home that’s the

interesting question

i’ve lived in about five different

countries across

three continents and

each one of those places i believe

has impacted me in a certain way

but at the same time i don’t know if i

can consider

any one of them home

the place that i live now i’ve lived

only

a year

so it’s probably the shortest amount of

time i’ve lived

in a place outside of my homeland

so i don’t think a year is long enough

for me to

to feel at home here i don’t feel not at

home i don’t feel rejected

i don’t feel like i don’t belong i just

don’t feel like

i’m home it’s not because i don’t think

i belong there

i just feel like i’ve outgrown it

thinking back i recently went back to

the country of my birth and lived there

for

two years two and a half years and it’s

probably the most

uncomfortable i’ve felt

the mo the place that is most not like

home for me

something a place that i had no real

connection to i’ve outgrown the cultures

well i could even say that i never even

adopted the culture in the first place

since i left when i was four years old

so it was it was very much a culture

shock going back

when i was 27 years old

and if you can’t call the place you’re

born home

where can you call home

coming a few years ahead

i came across this thing called sound

therapy that intrigued me

and sound therapy basically works on a

premise that

disease is an imbalance within your body

and

that you can use sound to tune your body

very much like a musical instrument

while i was researching about this and

while i was studying about it

i was told that it can cure cancer and

that was a very tall claim for someone

like me

and i needed some qualitative and

quantitative analysis

some facts and figures to prove that it

was right

i had the opportunity to do that and i

collaborated that

on this project with a colleague of mine

christian hofstadter

christian hof stutter is a brilliant man

basically what he does

is makes these eeg machines and you can

track your

brain activity while this is going on so

during the sessions we had models models

are people who had volunteered for the

study

and uh the models had fallen asleep so

they claimed

to have fallen in deep sleep but we

found out

that their brains were as active as you

know in the middle of the day

during the study we still have a lot of

data to unpack from this

and while we were working on it there

were these two directors who came up to

us and they were really interested in

the kind of research i was doing

and they were making it on asmr

asmr is basically auto sensory meridian

response

it is the feeling of pins and needles at

the back of your head when you listen to

a particular kind of sound or visual

stimulus

we ended up making the documentary

together and it

premiered at london film festival this

last year

also coming back to whether or not sound

therapy

causes uh cures cancer i still don’t

know but what i do know about it is that

if in this day and age if somebody can

relax for five minutes

it’s worth it so this encouraged me

to you know what more could be possible

with this sort of research and it sort

of brought me

to back to my friend’s school

shruti mori she runs somewhere

foundation in kulu himachal pradesh

tamfer foundation works towards building

an inclusive world for people with

diverse

abilities there are kids who come in

with autistic spectrum disorders

and cerebral palsy and they’re really

nurtured in this school

and i used to go there and visit her

time and again

and i started to wonder how i could

apply what i know

to help these kids in a way in a way i

don’t know if it’s still helping them

but i hope it does so i started making

these adaptive devices

using sound so everybody learns at a

different pace

and in their own way and learning

doesn’t only happen in a classroom or

doesn’t rely on a particular sense you

learn

via different you know different

receptors you can learn via sound you

can learn via touch you can learn via

days

so that’s how we generate our memories

and that’s how neuroplasticity comes

into place

basically so what i have done is i

basically just

took a blank of wood place all these

latches

now a lot of these kids it’s very

difficult for them to even you know

hold something or move something from

one point to the next

so this sort of keeps on training them

keeps their hands busy

and you know sort of helps them out

in making different connections and it

entrains their brain

couldn’t hold anything a few years

and this is himani this is another

device that i ended up making so this is

himani has no faculty of speech yet

she’s

older but we’re trying to get her to

play

and trying to make her to mimic the

sounds by the sense of touch

so this is her interacting with the

contraption that i came

so as you might have realized i work a

lot

with sensory overlaps and technological

overlaps now this installation

is basically a

immersive sensory simulating in

insulation basically what it does is it

picks up

sounds of people entering into this

space and

it simulates a visual response to it so

the tone and the intonation of your

voice

it makes the patterns change within the

structure and the volume

increases the brightness of the

structure

the idea was to generate a synesthetic

experience

and it is upside down

can we play this

[Music]

oh

[Music]

[Music]

crosstalk explores these sensory

overlaps and it speaks about

how harmony might not be present in our

environment

but is fabricated by our con by our

cognition

the meaning of sound is often invested

in the object that created it

and we put these objects together in

order to form

a narrative i’m still

very unsure about a lot of things but i

do know

two things for sure one is that the mind

is a beautiful thing whatever it thinks

it becomes

and the other is that you should never

ever underestimate the value of an idea

my name is farah mullah thank you for

[Applause]

listening

晚上好

女士们先生们我的名字是

法拉穆勒我的工作是理解

人们看不到的东西我也害怕

在公共场合演讲

所以

如果你们都可以站起来我们就做个小练习

在我们做这个练习的时候,我会

要求你暂停

所有内心的思考,试着把

你的意识

集中在你周围发生的声音上,

每个人都准备好了,我们将

开始用我们的手掌摩擦

,然后我们 “我们很快就要打响

指了

,这听起来不像是下雨

吗?我们要揉大腿,

我们要用手掌再次产生一些热量

,然后把它放在我们的

眼睛上,

然后深呼吸几下。”

对了,你现在可以就座了

,晚上好,女士们,先生们

,孩子们,现在当个孩子很难

,在我成长的过程中,你们有很多职业选择,

我记得我的

老师问我长大后想成为什么样的人

, 我告诉她 显然我

想成为一只企鹅

,这对我来说并不

适合大多数人我从小就听

很多音乐

我祖父曾经听

很多印度古典音乐

而我父亲过去经常听

西方古典音乐

,在我们幸运的日子里,他们

会在中间地带安顿下来,让

我们在唱机上听鲸鱼的声音

,你知道我在大学学习科学,

因为

那是最相关的思想路线

对我来说,那对我来说是最相关的

,是的,我越来越紧张,抱歉

,这对我来说是最相关的,

当我在地质学硕士学位的第二年时,

我开始意识到它没有

提供 我有

我需要的那种创意出路,所以我决定

要找到那个出路,

然后我继续学习美术。现在

听起来

很容易,但并不那么

容易,

但它为我提供了机会

探索

和fi 找到了我需要的创意出口,

我继续在剑桥艺术

学院学习美术

,那时我遇到了这个

叫约翰凯奇的人

,他基本上是我的英雄,他改变了我的

生活,他让我回到了这些

鲸鱼的声音 我是听着音乐长大的

,他让我

不仅能理解和理解它,

还能用我自己的方式表达它,

所以当我说声音时,我不仅仅是

指某种东西,我不仅仅是

指基本上有组织的音乐 声音,

我的意思是所有振动的东西,

包括

静音现在人耳的

听觉频谱

为 20 赫兹到 20 000 千赫兹

,上下发出声音的所有东西

都是耳朵无法接受的,所以

显然没有静音这样的东西

一种能量和能量

是科学家甚至在今天也

难以定义的东西,我们一次又一次地回到

希腊人所说的关于能量的

东西,基本上它是

在起作用的东西,你能想象所有的东西吗?

随着技术和科学的进步

,我们仍然坚持定义

类似声音变得更有趣的东西,

因为它本身没有材料

它本身没有物理特性,

它谈到了物质性,

它是我们最原始的手段

自我防卫,我们总是

沉浸其中 我们有眼皮,而且没有

早,所以我们总是沉浸在

声音中 它是最早

在你母亲子宫里三个月大的时候发育的感觉

之一,是 我们死后最后一次通过,

所以这是

在剑桥期间我回来时研究的出发点

一开始

,那是一段令人

困惑的时期 让我很高兴学习

新事物并找到

你所知道的创造性和有意义的方式来应用

这项研究

,我就是这样,创造力是一种

现象,创造出新的和有价值的东西

创造力也是折叠纸飞机

,让它飞得更远

有时也在为自己发明一个工作类别,

而你却没有,

所以无论如何我是一名有创造力的研究员

,我的研究是关于声音如何

影响人类的主观性和多年来的声音

体验

,我的研究采用了

不同的渠道和不同的方式 形式

有时

是博物馆和画廊中的艺术装置

有时是为期刊写作

有时是制作电影

配乐 有时是制作自适应

设备

所以我将带你

了解其中一些

疯狂创造力的出路 这是发生的

vinsharton vinsharten

基本上只是翻译成一个风窗

这个装置是在古朴的

小村庄制作的 kalga

kalga 基本上没有当地人,它

的经济当时由四家旅馆组成,

并且产生了大量塑料废物

作为副产品,

这是一种动力绝缘,这

意味着它

与风相互作用,环境风的强度

和方向 风的作用会

激活结构以产生

声音响应,

所以我们所做的是四处

收集一千个

用过的塑料瓶和废弃的塑料

,我们切割干净并塑造它们,

我们调整

它们以产生声音

响应。 对它的视觉和建筑

反应是对当今世界各地正在

发生的浪费和消费循环的隐喻,

所以这听起来像

[音乐]

这是翻译的,所以这

是我几年在奥斯陆做的一件作品 以前它

基本上是

使用人声作为声音涂鸦

我们将在几个篮子里传递这幅作品

一些志愿者

会拿出它

所以基本 称为记录,因此每个代码都

被转录成一个录音

,讲述了

基本上保留

已搬迁人的录音

和叙述的想法,他们通过风景和声音讲述他们

的搬迁经历

这些代码没有放在画廊中

这些代码基本上

分布在奥斯陆市的

电车、公共汽车和渡轮上

,虽然这些代码讲述了不同

人的移民故事,

但他们正在自己移民,我

认为最快乐的时刻

是当我发现一个代码传播

到阿拉斯加时 我可以通过这种方式跟踪这些内容的

访问位置,

因此英语被用作标准化

语言,

因为它揭示和隐藏了人们

作为一种语言作为身份标志的

身份,

所以我们将在那里听 karan

shah

我在哪里打电话 家,这是一个

有趣的问题,

我在三大洲的五个不同国家生活过 相信

以某种方式影响了我,

但同时我不知道我是否

可以考虑

他们中的任何一个人回到

我现在居住的地方我只住

了一年

所以这可能是我最短的

时间 我住

在我家乡以外的地方,

所以我认为一年的时间不足以

让我

在这里感到宾至如归 我不觉得不

在家 我不觉得被拒绝

我不觉得我不觉得 不属于我只是

不觉得

我在家这不是因为我不认为

我属于那里

我只是觉得我已经长大了

回想我最近回到

了我出生的国家并在那里生活

两年 两年半,这

可能是

我最不舒服的感觉 对我

来说最不像

的地方 一个与我没有真正

联系的地方 我已经超越了

文化 我什至可以说 自从我四岁离开后,我什至从来没有

接受过这种文化,

所以这在很大程度上是一种文化

冲击

回到我 27 岁的时候

,如果你不能把你出生的地方称为家,那么你在

哪里可以称之为家

几年前

我遇到了一种叫做声音

疗法的东西,它引起了我的兴趣

,声音疗法基本上适用于

假设

疾病是您体内的不平衡,

并且您可以像乐器一样使用声音来调节身体

对于

像我这样的人来说

,要求很高,我需要一些定性和

定量分析

一些事实和数据来证明这

是正确的

一个聪明的人

基本上他所做的

是制造这些脑电图机器,你可以

在这个过程中跟踪你的大脑活动,所以

在会议期间我们有模型模型

是那些拥有 自愿参加这项

研究

,嗯,模型已经睡着了,所以

他们

声称已经进入深度睡眠,但我们

发现他们的大脑在研究期间的中午就像你所知道的一样活跃,

我们仍然有很多

数据可以 解开这一点

,当我们正在研究它时,

有两位导演来找

我们,他们对

我正在做的那种研究非常感兴趣

,他们正在做 asmr

asmr 基本上是自动感觉经络

反应,

它是

当你听到

一种特殊的声音或视觉

刺激时,

后脑勺会

发麻

呃治愈癌症我仍然不

知道,但我知道的是,

如果在这个时代如果有人可以

放松五分钟,

这是值得的,所以这鼓励了我

,你知道还有什么 这种研究是有可能

的,它

让我

回到了我朋友的学校

shruti mori 她

在库鲁喜马偕尔邦的某个地方经营基金会

tamfer 基金会致力于

为具有不同能力的人建立一个包容的世界

自闭症谱系障碍

和脑瘫,他们真的是

在这所学校里培养出来的

,我过去常常去那里一次又一次地拜访她

,我开始想知道如何

运用我所知道的

以某种方式帮助这些孩子

不知道它是否仍然对他们有帮助,

但我希望它确实如此,所以我开始使用声音制作

这些自适应设备,

这样每个人都可以以

不同的速度

和自己的方式学习,而且学习

不仅发生在教室里

,也不依赖于 在特定的意义上,你

通过不同的方式学习你知道不同的

感受器你可以通过声音学习你

可以通过触摸学习你可以通过

几天

来学习这就是我们产生记忆的方式

,这就是神经系统的方式

可塑性基本上就位了,

所以我所做的就是我

基本上只是

拿了一块空白的木头来放置所有这些

闩锁

现在很多这些孩子

即使你知道

拿东西或将东西从

一个点移动到另一个点对他们来说也很困难

所以 这种不断训练他们

让他们的手忙起来

,你知道帮助

他们建立不同的联系,它让

他们的大脑

在几年内无法容纳任何东西

,这就是 himani,这是

我最终制作的另一种设备所以 这是

himani 没有语言能力,但

年纪大了,但我们正试图让她

玩,

并试图让她

通过触觉来模仿声音,

所以这是她与我来的装置互动,

所以你可能会 已经意识到我

在感官重叠和技术

重叠方面

了很多工作 进入这个

空间,

它会模拟对它的视觉反应,所以

你的声音的音调和语调

它会使结构内的模式发生变化

,音量

增加

结构

的亮度这个想法是为了产生一种联觉

体验

,它是颠倒的

我们可以播放这个

[音乐]

[音乐]

[音乐]

相声探索了这些感官上的

重叠,它讲述

了我们的环境中可能不存在的和谐,

而是我们的认知通过我们的骗局制造出来

的声音的意义通常被投入

到 创造它的对象

,我们将这些对象放在一起以

形成叙述我仍然

对很多事情非常不确定,但我

确实

知道两件事,一是头脑

是一个美丽的东西,无论它认为

它变成了什么

, 另一个是你永远不应该

低估一个想法的价值

我的名字是法拉毛拉谢谢你

[掌声]